Five Types of People Who Kill Innovation
Who are
the people that kill innovation in corporate organizations? Here is my take on
five types. Let me know what you think and what you can you add.
1. Executives, who do not get innovation:
The
actions of executives continue to be the single-most important element when it
comes to making innovation happen in organizations.
2. Incompetent innovation directors:
These
people must be able to fulfill the needs of current and future markets. They
must be able to bring internal as well as external resources together in order
to make this happen. At the same time, innovation directors need to know how to
play the political game that is always played in organizations. This is a tough
job and there is no room for incompetent people.
3. Informal leaders:
Some
people just have more influence than others even though they are not formal
leaders. But by being just what they are – informal leaders – they can make or
break projects that can help build a stronger innovation culture.
Unfortunately, some informal leaders like the status quo, which can become a
big hindrance for innovation.
4. Key people, who miss the bigger picture:
Every
innovation project has several key people attached to it. They are valuable
because they contribute with very specific knowledge. However, they also become
a liability if they only focus on their own contribution and fail to understand
the value of contributions from other functions or from people outside the
organization. We need more t-shaped people.
We can
also argue that middle managers fall into this category. It is a bit strange,
but they often hinder innovation by just doing their job (get things done),
which often does not include a big picture view. To be fair, this one circles
back to the executives, who must make an effort not to put middle managers in
such a situation.
5. YOU:
You kill
innovation when you stop challenging the status quo, when you stop believing
and when you stop pushing the limit.
It only
takes a few people with the wrong mindset in the “right” places to kill
innovation. Don’t be one of them
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